Scientists are turning to desktop printers in an effort to produce three dimensional tubes of living tissue and possibly even entire organs.
Instead of using a degradable scaffold and covering it with cells to produce tissue, scientists in the United States are modifying ink jet printers and using cells to create 3D structures.
"The work is a first step toward printing complex tissues or even entire organs," New Scientist magazine said on Jan. 22.
Although producing organs is a very long way away, many laboratories are printing arrays of DNA, proteins and even cells.
Vladimir Mironov, of the Medical University of South Carolina, and Thomas Boland, of Clemson University in the same state, have used a non-toxic, biodegradable gel and animal cells to make the structures.
"By printing alternate layers of the gel and clumps of cells on to glass slides, they have shown 3D structures such as tubes can be built," according to the magazine.
But before scientists can produce organs they will have to solve the problem of creating circulatory networks to provide oxygen and nutrients to the cells in the structures. But the scientists hope it will be possible.
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